I don't know anything much about philosophy, but I'm interested in the concept of the world existing in your mind and would like to explore the idea. I don't mean solipsism, I just mean that your experience of the outside world is created in your mind/brain from the inputs of your senses. — John Paterson
FWIW, here's my blog review of Hoffman's book, and its thesis of Model Dependent Realism.I think the most popular is Donald Hoffman's The case against reality. — Down The Rabbit Hole
FWIW, here's my blog review of Hoffman's book, and its thesis of Model Dependent Realism.
Reality is not what you see :
http://bothandblog6.enformationism.info/page21.html
Model-dependent realism :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model-dependent_realism — Gnomon
Don Hoffman was a close associate of Francis Crick, and they worked together for years. But Hoffman was a lot younger, and began to diverge from Crick in his basic worldview. Crick was a fairly traditional reductive-materialist-classical scientist, and famously said "you are nothing but a pack of neurons". Yet, over time, Hoffman's views turned toward more holistic Eastern models of reality, in which "You" are more than your physical structure. He also was influenced by the contra-classical findings of Quantum Theory -- including the role of the observer in constructing models of reality. And I wouldn't be surprised, if Crick lived long enough to read Hoffman's latest books, that he would find his ideas "radical". Nevertheless, Hoffman remains respectful of his mentor's contributions to science.didn't know Hoffman had discussed his ideas with THE Francis Crick? I'm not surprised he was a critic.
I take it Hoffman is a lot more radical than the rather tame view that reality and our perception of it are not one and the same? — Down The Rabbit Hole
See my reply to for an introduction to Don Hoffman's answer to your question.I just wonder what the implications are of this and:
-how much of our world view is stuff we invent ourselves
- how much control we have over our world view — John Paterson
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